Thesis ID: CBB001567636

Gifted Women and Skilled Practitioners: Gender and Healing Authority in the Delaware Valley, 1740--1830 (2014)

unapi

Brandt, Susan Hanket (Author)


Temple University
Klepp, Susan E.
Waldstreicher, David
Brown, Kathleen M.
Waldstreicher, David
Glasson, Travis
Brown, Kathleen M.
Glasson, Travis


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Advisor: Klepp, Susan E; Committee Members: Waldstreicher, David, Glasson, Travis, Brown, Kathleen M.
Physical Details: 516 pp.
Language: English

This dissertation uncovers women healers' vital role in the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century healthcare marketplace. Euro-American women healers participated in networks of health information sharing that reached across lines of class and gender, and included female practitioners in American Indian and African American communities. Although their contributions to the healthcare labor force are relatively invisible in the historical record, women healers in the Delaware Valley provided the bulk of healthcare for their families and communities. Nonetheless, apart from a few notable monographs, women healers' practices and authority remain understudied. My project complicates a medical historiography that marginalizes female practitioners and narrates their declining healthcare authority after the mid-eighteenth century due to the emergence of a consumer society, a culture of domesticity, the professionalization of medicine, and the rise of enlightened science, which generated discourses of women's innate irrationality. Using the Philadelphia area as a case study, I argue that women healers were not merely static traditional practitioners destined to fall victim to the march of science, medicine, and capitalism as this older narrative suggests. Instead, I assert that women healers of various classes and ethnicities adapted their practices as they found new sources of healthcare authority through female education in the sciences, manuscript authorship, access to medical print media, the culture of sensibility, and the alternative gender norms of religious groups like the Quakers. Building on a longstanding foundation of recognized female practitioners, medically skilled women continued to fashion healing authority by participating in mutually affirming webs of medical information exchanges that reflected new ideas about science, health, and the body. In addition, women doctresses, herbalists, apothecaries, and druggists empowered themselves by participating in an increasingly commercialized and consumer-oriented healthcare marketplace. Within this unregulated environment, women healers in the colonies and early republic challenged physicians' claims to a monopoly on medical knowledge and practice. The practitioners analyzed in this study represent a bridge between the recognized and skilled women healers of the seventeenth century and the female healthcare professionals of the nineteenth century.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 76/02(E), Aug 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1617470671.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567636/

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Authors & Contributors
Strocchia, Sharon T.
Buehler, Scottie Hale
Slagstad, Ketil
Rusterholz, Caroline
Chung, Ji-Won
Scarth, Kate
Journals
Renaissance Studies
Asian Medicine: Tradition and Modernity
Medical History
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Health and History
Gender Forum: An Internet Journal for Gender Studies
Publishers
Pickering & Chatto
Manchester University Press
Harvard University Press
Ashgate
Princeton University
Lehigh University
Concepts
Authority of medicine
Women in medicine
Medicine and gender
Health care
Medicine
Expertise
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century
Early modern
Renaissance
17th century
Places
Europe
China
Great Britain
Oslo (Norway)
Ethiopia
England
Institutions
University of Oslo
Société Royale de Médecine
Universität Göttingen
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